VIDEO: M.I.A., "Boyz"

The first song, “Bamboo Banga,” is the album’s longest, clocking in at five minutes — a dare of sorts, right out of the gate. This demanding track begins with a battery of tom-toms and then a stark melody-less rhythm, with just thumps of bass and distorted handclaps and M.I.A.’s atonal reverbed ramblings. The words she’s saying — “roadrunner, roadrunner, going 100 mile per hour” — are immediately recognizable from the first Modern Lovers LP. The relevance of the reference is at best nebulous.
There’s something sardonic in opening a major-label disc this way, with borrowed words and no easy hooks. It’s not unlike Nirvana’s “Serve the Servants,” the first track on their 1993 follow-up to Nevermind, In Utero. People may have wanted another “Smells like Teen Spirit”; instead they got a mess of guitar distortion that entered a beat before expected, and a choice cut of self-saboteur Cobain’s cynicism: “Teenage angst has paid off well/Now I’m bored and old.” But M.I.A. goes a step farther, because “Bamboo Banga” never really relents. It remains throughout a dizzying assault on American pop sensibilities, the lyrics playing on her outsider status with linguistic errors that have M.I.A. fancying herself a Kipling-style savage: “We’re moving with the packs like hyena-ena.”
The assault continues. Counting baile funk and Miami bass and dancehall among the genres she borrows from, M.I.A. privileges percussion over melody, groove over structure, exotic over expected instrumentation. “Bird Flu” has a beat built from chicken squawks; the bass line to “Mango Pickle Down River” is played by a didgeridoo. She hardly sings; one of the times she does is on a cover of “Jimmy Jimmy Aaja,” a cheesy Hindi-disco song from 1982 that to many will sound like a polka. The closing “Paper Planes” is a gangsta-rap lullaby that, with a wink, samples the opening seconds of the Clash’s “Straight to Hell.”
M.I.A.’s been marketed more or less as a hip-hop artist in the US, but she rarely obeys the industry standards for structure or content. She doesn’t talk sex, she doesn’t sell drugs, she doesn’t talk about how she doesn’t talk about sex or drugs. “Boyz” is a song about boys, but it’s willfully naive in its throes, M.I.A. letting the ecstatic drums and horns and crowd noise imply her excitement. Far from an ode to dealing, “Hussel” is a love letter to the working class. “We do it cheap, hide our money in a heap/Send it home and make ’em study/Fixing teeth, I got family, a friend in need,” she whispers. “I hate money coz it makes me numb.”
Point being, she’s not only bored by hip-hop posturing, she’s offended by its solipsism. If working hard is gangster, M.I.A. says, entire Third World populations significantly outpace our trappers-turned-rappers. “You think it’s tough now?/Come to Africa,” taunts guest Afrikan Boy in “Hussel.” The line is rewound a few more times for emphasis, and then the rest comes out: “Out there we are grinding like pepper/You can catch me on the motorway/Selling sugar water and pepper/I rep Africa not Miami” — a quick jab at Dade County’s Rick Ross, the rapper behind last year’s “Hustlin’.” Later, on “Paper Planes,” M.I.A. brags, “No one on the corner has swagger like us,” cajoling a chorus of young children into a sing-song about stick-ups complete with gunshots and open-register sounds. “Some I murder, some I let go,” she sings proudly and brightly. It’s discomforting, the tension between lyric and melody, the kind of musical gesture that shames us because, before the words register, it seems so harmless.